Growing up on Guam, Julian Aguon saw the law used against Indigenous peoples. Now he’s fighting back in the world’s highest court.

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Julian Aguon wore a dark blue suit and garland made of white coconut fronds, brown hibiscus tree bark, and brown cowry shells. Under the arched ceilings and chandeliers of the Peace Palace in The Hague, he stepped to the podium to . 

鈥淭he right to self-determination is a cornerstone of the international legal order,鈥 Aguon told the 15 judges who make up the court. 鈥淵et climate change, and the conduct responsible for it, has already infringed the right to self-determination for the many peoples of Melanesia.鈥 

The International Court of Justice normally hears disputes over lands and waters between countries, but sometimes it takes on cases of broader global resonance. This was one of them: Aguon was arguing on behalf of Pacific island nations thousands of miles away that hope to hold accountable the countries most responsible for climate change. The spent five years working toward this moment, along with his co-counsel, Margaretha Wewerinke-Singh. Now, he sought to underscore what was at stake.

Attorney Julian Aguon, left, meets with colleague Addie Rolnick after arguing before a panel of 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals judges in Honolulu on Wednesday, Oct. 10, 2018. The question before the judges: Should non-native residents of Guam have a say in the territory's future political relationship with the United States? (AP Photo/Jennifer Sinco Kelleher)
Attorney Julian Aguon, left, meets with colleague Addie Rolnick after arguing a case before a panel of 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals judges in Honolulu. (AP Photo/Jennifer Sinco Kelleher/2018)

鈥淭he peoples of Melanesia live exceptionally close to the Earth, and thus feel the vandalism visited upon it acutely,鈥 he said. 鈥淢oreover, theirs represents living, breathing alternative imaginations 鈥 imaginations other than the one that has brought this planet to the brink of ecological collapse. Thus, ensuring they are able to live and thrive in their ancestral spaces is of the utmost importance, and not only for themselves, but for all of humanity.鈥

Drive For Justice

Aguon grew up on Guam, the son of a plumber and a social worker. His childhood consisted of playing in jungles with his cousins, where elders warned them to avoid anything metal in case it was leftover ordnance from World War II; family gatherings to pray the rosary in the Chamorro language; and absorbing a cultural devotion to serving one鈥檚 community. His dad worked short stints for various employers, including at a naval ship repair facility, and died of pancreatic cancer when Aguon was 9. Aguon has wondered if his death was related .

At the time, his father鈥檚 death led his family to disintegrate, and Aguon buried himself in books like “The House on Mango Street,” the story of a Chicana girl growing up in Chicago 鈥 a coping mechanism that deepened his empathy and drive for justice. A quote from James Baldwin resonates with Aguon today: 鈥淵ou think your pain and your heartbreak are unprecedented in the history of the world, but then you read.鈥

鈥淕rief so often has an isolating effect that it need not have,鈥 Aguon told Grist. 鈥淚 feel like my grief has been a bridge that I鈥檝e walked across to get to other people.鈥

In the 1990s, when Aguon was a kid, a massive typhoon hit Guam. The windows and sliding glass door in his home shattered, and Aguon, his brother, sister, and mother propped a mattress up in their living room and hid behind it. Aguon remembers tracing the mattress鈥 embroidered flowers with his finger as the family waited for the winds to pass. Years later, he would read a report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change that predicted the coming of even stronger cyclones.

鈥淎t that moment I was like, 鈥榃ow, we鈥檝e already been through so much,鈥欌 he said. How much more extreme would the storms get? How much more would his community have to endure? 鈥淚 had a really shocking sense of the scale.鈥

The case before the ICJ, led by Aguon鈥檚 law firm, , hopes to establish legal consequences for nations that have driven climate change, and illuminate what obligations those countries owe to people harmed.

Julian Aguon and his colleagues walk outside of the Peace Palace in The Hague after arguing the world鈥檚 biggest climate case. Michel Porro/Getty Images via Grist
Julian Aguon and his colleagues walk outside of the Peace Palace in The Hague after arguing the world鈥檚 biggest climate case. (Michel Porro/Getty Images via Grist)

The court is being asked to provide an advisory opinion to clarify the legal obligations of countries under existing international law. Aguon describes it as a request for an objective yardstick by which to measure those countries鈥 actions, which could open the door to a new era of climate reparations.

After Aguon and Wewerinke-Singh exited the courtroom earlier this month, they joined a press conference before the palace驶s marble staircase near its front entrance. Ralph Regenvanu, Vanuatu鈥檚 top climate official, told reporters that the island nation deliberately chose Blue Ocean Law to represent them at the ICJ because the Indigenous-led firm would not only represent them legally, but culturally. 

鈥淭his is a case about our identity as Pacific Islanders, our human rights as citizens of this planet, and the responsibilities that states have to ensure our human rights and our cultural identity and our essence and our future is protected,鈥 Regenvanu said. 

Climate-Related Lawsuits

If the ICJ delivers the advisory opinion Vanuatu is seeking, Aguon hopes Indigenous peoples will be able to leverage that opinion in climate-related lawsuits against their governments and file human rights complaints against both countries and corporations. Given the are , the stakes couldn鈥檛 be higher.

In the summer of 2010, then-28-year-old Aguon was just a year out of law school and was looking for a job after finishing up a clerkship with Guam鈥檚 Supreme Court. He wanted to work in international and human rights law, but no firms specialized in that on Guam, the largest island in the Pacific region of Micronesia that鈥檚 home to about 160,000 people. Well-established lawyers on the island discouraged him from trying to start a new firm from scratch: Why not work for a few years, get some more experience, they suggested. 

鈥淭hey were right, in some ways,鈥 Aguon said. 鈥淚 did lack experience, but I didn鈥檛 necessarily need the experience that they had, because I wanted to do something different.鈥

Tuvalu under the wing of an airplane. Aerial view of Funafuti atoll and the airstrip of International airport in Vaiaku. Fongafale motu. Island nation in Polynesia, South Pacific Ocean, Oceania.
Aguon argues on behalf of Pacific island nations such as Tuvalu as they face an existential threat from climate change. (Getty Images/iStockphoto)

What he envisioned was a law firm that could advocate on behalf of Indigenous peoples in the Pacific: communities like , which are still fighting for justice after decades of U.S. nuclear testing; like the people of Tuvalu, where rising seas are threatening to eliminate entire islands; and the Chamorros, like Aguon, where an ever-expanding American military presence increasingly .

Opening Up Blue Ocean Law

To accomplish that, Aguon would need to be licensed to practice law in multiple countries. He spent months studying for and passing bar exams not only on Guam, but also in the Marshall Islands and Palau. He opened a solo law practice in 2010 in a tiny office in the village of Hag氓t帽a, Guam鈥檚 capital.

At first he worked locally, providing legal counsel to Guam鈥檚 Legislature and defending the island government鈥檚 plans for an Indigenous-only vote on the island鈥檚 political status. As his workload grew and his clientele expanded, he opened up Blue Ocean Law in 2014, and began to hire staff attorneys who saw the law the way he did: as a tool for social change that is both severely limited and potentially emancipatory. 

鈥淲e are a small team of activist lawyers, social change lawyers,鈥 Aguon said. His colleagues include his ICJ co-lead Wewerinke-Singh, who has worked on climate litigation across multiple regions and U.N. courts; Alofipo So鈥檕 alo Fleur Ramsay, a Samoan attorney whose environmental justice work in Australia and in the Pacific has earned her chiefly orator titles from two villages in Samoa; and Watna Mori, a Melanesian lawyer from Papua New Guinea whose expertise in human rights and environmental law extends to advocacy for legal systems that value Indigenous knowledge systems.

鈥淭his is a case about our identity as Pacific Islanders.”

Ralph Regenvanu, Vanuatu鈥檚 top climate official

Blue Ocean Law now includes seven attorneys, whose work spans Melanesia, Micronesia, and Polynesia, the three major regions of the Pacific. 

Over the next decade, Aguon argued for Guam鈥檚 right to self-determination before a U.S. federal appeals court in Honolulu, defending the island鈥檚 effort to limit a vote on Guam鈥檚 political status to Indigenous Chamorros. (Chamorro is also spelled CHamoru, but Aguon prefers the former). He lost, and Guam has yet to schedule a vote.

But Aguon is still proud of one aspect of the judges鈥 decision, which recognizes a legal distinction between racial and ancestry classifications. 鈥淔rom now on, for all Indigenous peoples living under U.S. rule, there is now a case that formally and comprehensively disentangles those two concepts, which means that Native peoples throughout the country can cite it to argue that some ancestral classifications are not the same as racial classifications,鈥 he said.

‘The Vocabulary Of The Powerful’

After losing in federal court, Aguon and his team took their advocacy on behalf of the people of Guam to the United Nations. The island is still formally recognized by the U.N. as a colony, and first became an American military outpost at the turn of the 20th century. For decades, the U.S. refused to grant Chamorros U.S. citizenship, and instead forced them to live under a carousel of capricious naval governors who banned everything from the Chamorro language to interracial marriage to whistling. 

鈥淟aw is the vocabulary of the powerful in so many instances,鈥 Aguon said. 鈥淭he U.S. military was probably my greatest teacher in that regard.鈥

His firm has advised the Marshall Islands鈥 government on its legal options as it continues to contend with the . Aguon and his colleagues have also worked with organizations and legislatures in Pacific countries like Fiji to consult on the .

Aguon鈥檚 team has filed complaints about human rights violations by the U.S. military against the Chamorro people with the United Nations, prompting three U.N. rapporteurs to issue a for denying the Chamorro people their right to self-determination. 

Just last month, Blue Ocean Law filed a complaint with the U.N. Rapporteur on Indigenous Peoples on behalf of youth from Palau who say U.S. militarization in their islands is violating their rights, including their right to freely consent to what happens on their land. 

鈥淲e鈥檙e consistently taking on the U.S. empire in all of these cases,鈥 Aguon said.

A child plays near a seawall under construction in Majuro. (Jessica Terrell/Civil Beat/2018)

In 2006, the same year that Aguon went to law school at the University of 贬补飞补颈驶颈, the U.S. military proposed a massive expansion of its presence on Guam, deciding to move its Marine Corps base to Guam from Okinawa after local opposition to the soldiers鈥 presence became impossible to ignore. (At the heart of the anti-military protests were concerns about American soldiers鈥 sexual violence against Okinawan women and girls, including the )

鈥淲e鈥檙e up against such huge, gigantic, colossal forces.”

Julian Aguon

Between the 8,000 service members, their 9,000 dependents, and the tens of thousands of construction workers and other staff needed to create more facilities for the new base, the military estimated there would be an influx of 80,000 people on Guam, increasing its population at the time by more than half. 鈥淚t鈥檚 good for the strategic interests of America,鈥 retired Marine Corps Major General David Bice 鈥淚t鈥檚 good for our friends in the Pacific, and it鈥檚 also good for Guam.鈥 

The community . Aguon felt that the military used language to obfuscate rather than illuminate the reality of their impact on Guam. For example, 鈥渓ive-fire training鈥 was a euphemism that could refer to anything from machine gun firing to large-scale bombing practice.

鈥淓nvironmental impact鈥 encompassed the destruction of cultural sites dating back more than 1,000 years. 鈥淩eadiness鈥 referred to the military鈥檚 ability to respond to threats, but it wasn鈥檛 always clear whether the Indigenous people were among those the U.S. cared about protecting.

鈥淭he law is about hyper-vigilance, hyper-attentiveness to how language is being used and deployed,鈥 Aguon said. 鈥淥ften it is being weaponized against people most in need of this protection.鈥 

Litigation and community protests forced the Department of Defense to shrink its military relocation to 5,000 troops, and change the location of its planned firing range. The new Marine Corps base opened last year, and a machine-gun practice range is being built adjacent to a federal wildlife refuge.

Aguon sees the law as a single tool among many to push back against this entrenched militarism that he sees echoed around the world, from Honolulu to Gaza. To him, what will ultimately effect change is solidarity. 

鈥淲e鈥檙e up against such huge, gigantic, colossal forces,鈥 Aguon said. 鈥淚鈥檓 casting my net of hope in that direction, that the peoples of the world 鈥 from the ground up 鈥 can really find more effective ways to confront these forces that we鈥檙e up against.鈥

In 2017, Aguon sat in Straub Hospital in Honolulu and held the hand of a longtime mentor, Marshallese leader Tony de Brum, who is known internationally for his global leadership in fighting climate change. De Brum had served as a father figure after Aguon鈥檚 dad passed and helped inspire his passion for climate justice. 鈥淕ive them hell,鈥 de Brum said, before he too died. Four years later, Aguon was named a for a screed on climate change in the Pacific:

When Vanuatu asked for his law firm鈥檚 help with its climate change case five years ago, Aguon hadn鈥檛 ever argued before the ICJ and wasn鈥檛 intimately familiar with the particularities of its proceedings.

‘No Easy Pathway’

The ICJ only accepts cases brought by U.N. member states, and because the U.S. never relinquished Guam, the island territory doesn鈥檛 have the right to file cases there. The same is true for countless Indigenous nations throughout the world whose borders are missing from most maps: The highest court in the United Nations doesn鈥檛 have a seat for them, and so their voices are rarely heard. That echoes other venues of the U.N., where Indigenous peoples are often left out of key negotiating rooms because their nations don鈥檛 have U.N. member state status and they lack representation within their colonial governments.

鈥淭he ICJ proceedings are more state- and international-organizations-focused, less people centered, where engagement by civil society is quite restricted, and Indigenous peoples do not have a direct pathway for engagement in the court,鈥 said Joie Chowdhury, a senior attorney at the who has also assisted on the climate case. That鈥檚 in contrast to other U.N. legal venues like the Inter-American Court of Human Rights and the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea, she said. 鈥淪o there is no easy pathway for Indigenous peoples鈥 engagement, and especially in this case, that would be important given their tremendous knowledge and expertise in climate change and biodiversity.鈥 

Sometimes, nongovernmental organizations may intercede, as in this ICJ case where a dozen were approved to participate. In addition to representing Vanuatu, Aguon驶s team is also representing the Melanesian Spearhead Group, a nongovernmental organization that consists of Melanesian Pacific island states. The organization also includes the Kanak Socialist National Liberation Front, which represents the Indigenous Kanak people of New Caledonia who are fighting for independence from France.

Bringing a case before the ICJ requires specific knowledge and meaningful funding, and often parties are represented by a cottage industry of attorneys who specialize in the ICJ and are familiar with its proceedings. This is only the second time that a Pacific state has sought an advisory opinion from the ICJ. The last time was in 1996, when the Marshall Islands asked the judges to weigh in on whether detonating or threatening to use nuclear weapons violated international law. that it may be legal in extreme cases of self-defense. 

鈥淢any of these countries that have never argued before the ICJ before are actually not just coming to argue their case, but leading from the front,鈥欌 said Chowdury from the Center for International Environmental Law. 鈥淚t is showing and demonstrating to the world that this is an avenue of justice.鈥

Just getting on the court docket is a challenge and, in this case, required getting a resolution approved by the U.N. General Assembly. The case was originally launched in 2019 by , who took a ground-up approach to persuading U.N. General Assembly members in the Pacific and beyond to formally request an ICJ advisory opinion. As their campaign grew, Aguon found himself and his staff providing input at all hours of the day every time a word or comma changed in the draft that circulated among U.N. delegates.

The case morphed into the largest-ever in ICJ鈥檚 history. Overall, 97 countries and 12 nongovernmental organizations are urging the court to weigh in on what major polluting countries owe to the peoples and nations who have been harmed by their relentless carbon emissions. Aguon , but oral arguments were scheduled for the first full two weeks of December. It鈥檚 not clear when an opinion will be rendered.

In the meantime, Aguon hopes that not only the court but the world will pay attention to the stories that the case is revealing about the cost of climate change to Pacific peoples. During the press conference near the entrance of the Peace Palace, he told the story of one of the villages he visited when collecting witness testimony for the case.

鈥淭here is a village at the mouth of a river in the Gulf province of Papua New Guinea, that is on the move again. The people of Vairibari, whose ancestors have lived along the banks of the Kikori River Delta since time immemorial, have already moved four times due to sea level rise. This will be their fifth and final relocation. Final, because there is simply no more inland to go,鈥 Aguon said. 

鈥淎 planning committee has been formed to handle the logistics. Among other things, the villagers are debating about how best to relocate the remains of their deceased relatives, because storm surges have already begun washing away the dead. The people of Vairibari want nothing more than to stay. But climate change is making that option all but impossible.鈥

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